The Global Context: Rethinking Career and Technical Education

May 28, 2015Lori Higgins of The Detroit Free Press for EWA

The United States should look to countries like Switzerland and Singapore – both seen as having strong, successful vocational education systems – if it wants to address the widening skills gap among young people.

That was the consensus of two of the three panelists during a discussion on rethinking career and technical education during the Education Writers Association’s 68th national seminar in Chicago.

“We are just losing a ton of kids between the ages of 16 and 20,” Robert Schwartz, a professor emeritus in the Harvard Graduate School of Education, said during the discussion moderated by Kirk Carapezza, a higher education reporter for the NPR member station WGBH public radio.

Schwartz has done extensive research on vocational programs. He said the future doesn’t bode well in the United States for young people who lack any kind of credential beyond a high school diploma – particularly if they’re poor or minority.

“You are at the back of the hiring queue and you are likely to stay there for a very, very long time,” said Schwartz, who coauthored the 2011 report, “Pathways to Prosperity: Meeting the Challenge of Preparing Young Americans for the 21st Century.” “It’s a huge social cost as well as a huge economic cost.”

The jumping-off point for the “Pathways” report, Schwartz said, was a recognition that 20 years into the standards movement in the United States, just 32 percent of young people have earned a four-year degree.

“The question that led us to: What’s our strategy for the two-thirds of young people not getting four-year degrees?” Schwartz said. “When Bill Clinton was president he used to say the U.S. was the only developed country that has no clear strategy for helping most of its young people make a successful transition.”

Schwartz and Marc Tucker, the president and CEO of the National Center on Education and the Economy, cited systems in Switzerland and Singapore as ones to look at. They said unemployment for young people in those countries is nearly nonexistent and it’s largely because of the strong vocational systems that have a large percentage of 16-year-olds entering training programs. Employers are heavily involved in the systems.

The same, Tucker said, is the case in other countries with strong vocational programs, like Denmark.

“The United States is 55 million miles away from there,” he said. Tucker argued that taking a piecemeal approach of developing promising programs here and there in the United States is no substitute for fundamentally rethinking career and technical education at the national level.

Tucker said recent data show the United States has gone from having “the most highly educated workforce in the industrialized world” in the 1970s to now having the least.

“Governors all over the United States are finding that it’s increasingly hard to retain domestic employers with global businesses because it is so hard to find labor at the technical level,” Tucker said.

Part of the problem is vocational – or career-technical education – programs lost their luster after the Vietnam War, Tucker said. Over the years people began to see the programs as the place for kids “incapable of doing academic work.”

The systems in Singapore and Switzerland have thrived because the students entering them are seen as having strong academic backgrounds.

In U.S. community colleges, where much of the vocational education training takes place, it’s the opposite. Tucker said his organization has analyzed community college textbooks and found they’re written at a 12th grade level in literacy “which is one year below where they should be.”

“The kids can’t read them,” he said. “The teachers in the community colleges in our study told us they had to make PowerPoint summaries of the main points and use high school level textbooks because the kids could not comprehend them.”

Reading experts gave them a sobering explanation: The average high school student graduates with a 7th or 8th grade reading level.

Meanwhile, the most demanding math courses in community college cover algebra 1, not algebra 2, Tucker said.

All of that illustrates the fundamental problem with trying to revamp the U.S. vocational education system, Tucker contends.“We can’t fix our vocational education system unless we supply [it] with kids who are as well educated as those who are going into the vocational education system in Switzerland and Singapore.”

There’s wide diversity in the quality of programs in the United States, said Kate Blosveren Kreamer, the associate executive director at the National Association of State Directors of Career Technical Education Consortium.

“There is very high quality [career technical education] … that is preparing kids, that is taking both low performers and high performers, connecting with employers, giving students meaningful work-based employment, meaningful academic, and technical experiences, and preparing them for postsecondary education and beyond,” she said.

But there are a lot of low-quality programs too, Kreamer said.

One of the biggest problems is the notion that all students should go to college, she added. Community colleges and technical education programs are usually left out of that definition of college, Kreamer said.

“It’s about how do we define college and getting some commitment across the board that college is not a four-year degree,” she said. “It’s everything under the sun.”

An equally big challenge, Kreamer said, is getting employers to co-invest in the system. In more successful countries, employers are big investors, funding large percentages of the training programs and offering apprenticeships.

“It’s a struggle here,” Kreamer said.

Some states, though, are getting it right. Kreamer cited New Jersey as having a strong dual system that includes vocational/technical schools and career academies.

“They are the best schools in the state,” she said. “These are schools where parents want their kids.”

Have a question, comment or concern for the Educated Reporter? Contact Emily Richmond. Follow her on Twitter @EWAEmily.

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